Technical Note 158 Conversion of PID Readings to Methane

Technical Note 158 Conversion of PID Readings to Methane

Technical Note TN-158 01/06/WH CONVERSION OF PID READINGS TO METHANE EQUIVALENT OR HEXANE EQUIVALENT FID RESPONSE INTRODUCTION This calibration applied to vapors from painting operations, Many regulatory agencies request inventories of chemicals released including such compounds as petroleum distillates, mineral spirits, to the air to be provided in units of methane equivalents. This is isobutyl acetate, isobutyl alcohol, isopropanol, toluene, xylenes, done as a way of normalizing the overall environmental impact of ethylbenzene, and MEK. a broad variety of different chemical types to a common unit, i.e., For gasoline vapors sampled with an isobutylene-calibrated PID and the total number of carbon atoms released. Traditionally, methane by charcoal tubes for lab GC, Drummond (2) found: equivalents of a mixture of organic compounds have been measured using a laboratory gas chromatograph (GC) calibrated with methane Benzene ppm = 0.20*(PID ppm) using a flame ionization detector (FID). Portable FIDs and PIDs provide a convenient, cost-saving method of making measurements In these cases the GC results gave actual concentrations of the in the field. Portable FIDs function on the same principle as individual components in ppm, but could have easily given methane the laboratory FIDs; however the sample inlet designs of many equivalents by calibrating the GC-FIDs to methane. portable FIDs often result in responses that are not proportional The advantage of this approach is its simplicity and accuracy once to the number of carbons in the organic compound. Therefore, the correlation has been obtained. It also can be used on highly methane equivalents measured on a portable FID do not necessarily complex and unknown mixtures. The disadvantage is that it applies correspond to the desired laboratory FID equivalents, which are to only one mixture and more laboratory tests are needed to proportional to carbons. establish a new correlation for each new mixture encountered. The Portable PIDs offer advantages over portable FIDs in their ease methods described below allow estimation of PID-FID conversion of use, smaller size and weight, lower cost, and lack of need factors for many mixtures without the need for sampling and for hydrogen cylinders. In addition, methane, which is exempt laboratory measurements. from most regulatory emissions limits, does not respond on a PID Lamp Selection PID. Methane is prevalent from both biogenic sources and from RAE Systems offers both 10.6 eV and 11.7 eV lamps for general natural gas distribution leaks, and thus use of a PID will reduce the hydrocarbon monitoring. The 10.6 eV lamp responds to pentane number of false positive responses. This article describes methods and higher hydrocarbons, and the 11.7 eV lamp responds to ethane for converting PID measurements to laboratory GC-FID methane (weakly), propane and higher hydrocarbons. As mentioned above, equivalents. Conversion of PID readings to hexane equivalents is methane and ethane are exempt from most regulations. Unless performed by analogous equations. propane or butane are specifically known to be present, the 10.6 eV Empirical Correlations lamp is preferred because it responds broadly to many solvents and The conceptually simplest conversion approach is to make PID fuels and has a considerably longer working life than the 11.7 eV measurements simultaneous with taking gas samples that are sent lamp. Even if propane or butane are present, their proportion of the to a laboratory for GC-FID analysis. When the results are compared, total hydrocarbons can be measured in a few laboratory tests and a PID-FID correlation factor or curve can be developed. For example, then the ratio used to correct the 10.6 eV PID readings. Therefore, Coy, et al. (1) found the following correlation when calibrating the the 10.6 eV lamp is recommended unless compounds that require an PID to isobutylene and sampling with charcoal for GC: 11.7 eV lamp dominate the emissions scenario. See Technical Note 106 for an extended list of compounds and their responses on these log(GC total ppm) = -0.042 + 1.05*log(PID ppm) two lamps. RAE Systems by Honeywell 877-723-2878 raesystems.com 1 Technical Note TN-158 01/06/WH Procedure Example 1. Single Compound To convert PID readings to methane equivalent FID readings, 1. Toluene is the only compound being measured. The Lab FID RF is proceed as follows: available in Table 1 and therefore the PID-FID CF is known (column 5). 1. Calibrate the PID to isobutylene using the standard procedures a. The reading is 10 ppm with the PID calibrated to isobutylene. 2. Measure the gas or gas mixture. The lab FID equivalent is 10 x 2.6 = 26 ppm methane units. 3. Multiply the observed readings by the PID-FID Correction b. With the PID calibrated directly to toluene (or calibrated Factor listed in one of the last two columns in Table 1 below. to isobutylene but using the built-in correction factor to read in toluene units) the display reading is 5 ppm. The Ideally, the value selected is the measured factor in the second- lab FID equivalent is 5 x 5.1 = 26 ppm methane units. to-last column. In the absence of a measured value, an upper limit to the methane-equivalent response can be estimated from the 2. Methyl cellosolve (2-methoxyethanol) is the only compound. The number of carbons in the molecule (last column). Lab FID RF is not available and therefore the PID-FID CF is estimated from the number of carbon atoms (Table 1, column 6). The PID PID-FID CORRECTION FACTOR DERIVATION FOR METHANE reading of 10 ppm corresponds to 10 x 7.2 = 72 ppm FID equivalents. EQUIVALENTS This value can be considered a safe, upper limit, because the true The rationale behind the PID-FID correction factors (CFs) is as factor is almost certainly less than the 7.2 estimated from the follows: number of carbons. The PID CF is defined as the value by which the readings are Example 2. Compound Mixture multiplied in order to obtain the true ppmv concentrations, when the The vapors consist of the following mixture: unit has been calibrated to isobutylene: 60% Ethyl acetate (EA) True ppmv = PID reading x PID CF (1) 25% Methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) The Lab FID Response Factor (RF) is defined as the relative response 15% Toluene (Tol) of the compound compared to methane. The methane equivalent The unit is calibrated to isobutylene and the reading is 50 ppm. As FID response is described in Technical Note 106, the average CF for this mixture is calculated as: CH4 Equivalents = True ppmv x FID RF (2a) An estimate of the FID RF is the number of carbon atoms in the CFmix = 1/(XEA/CFEA + XMEK/CFMEK + XTol/CFTol (5) molecule, in which case Eq (2a) becomes: CFmix = 1/(0.60/4.6 + 0.25/0.86 + 0.15/0.50) = 1.4 The true total concentration is 50 x 1.4 = 70 ppm, which consists CH4 Equivalents = True ppmv x #C Atoms (2b) of 42 ppm ethyl acetate, 17.5 ppm MEK, and 10.5 ppm toluene. Combining Eqs (2a) or (2b) with Eq (1) yields: Multiplying each compound by their respective FID RF factors from Table 1: CH4 Equivs = PID read x PID CF x FID RF (3a) CH4 Equivs = PID read x PID CF x #Cs (3b) CH4 Equivalents = 42 x 2.0 + 17.5 x 2.2 + 10.5 x 5.1 = 176 ppm The PID-FID CFs are thus: To simplify, an average FID RF can be calculated for the mixture as: PID-FID CF (Meas.) = PID CF x FID RF (4a) RFmix = XEA x RFEA + XMEK x RFMEK + XTol x RFTol (6) PID-FID CF (Calc.) = PID CF x #Cs (4b) RFmix = 0.60 x 2.0 + 0.25 x 2.2 + 0.15 x 5.1 = 2.5 If the PID is calibrated using the gas of interest, then it reads directly Then, according to Eq. 3a: in true ppmv and therefore it is not necessary to multiply by the PID CF, only by the FID RF or the number of carbon atoms. CH4 Equivs = PID read x PID CF x FID RF (3a) CH4 Equivs = 50 x 1.4 x 2.5 = 175 ppm CH4 Equivs = PID reading x 3.5 = 175 ppm RAE Systems by Honeywell 877-723-2878 raesystems.com 2 Technical Note TN-158 01/06/WH Example 3. Mixture with Non-Responding Compounds PID-FID CORRECTION FACTOR DERIVATION FOR HEXANE The vapors consist of the following mixture: EQUIVALENTS Although a PID with 10.6 eV lamp can be calibrated with hexane, 60% Ethyl acetate (EA) the resulting PID hexane equivalents are different than FID hexane 25% Methylene chloride (MC) equivalents. Therefore, the same procedures should be used for 15% Toluene (Tol) hexane as described above for methane, by substituting the factors The unit is calibrated to isobutylene and the reading is 50 ppm. in Table 2 in place of those in Table 1. Table 2 assumes calibration There is no response to methylene chloride with the 10.6 eV lamp, with isobutylene. If the instrument is calibrated with hexane therefore its correction factor is infinite. The average CF for this instead, the values in Table 2 should be divided by 4.3. mixture is calculated as: The values in Table 2 are calculated as : CFmix = 1/(X /CF + X /CF + X /CF ) EA EA MC MC Tol Tol #Cs in compound x PID CF / #Cs in hexane, or CFmix = 1/(0.60/4.6 + 0.25/∞ + 0.15/0.50) = 2.3 #Cs in compound x PID CF / 6 (isobutylene calib.) The average FID RF is calculated as (Eq.

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